O-mannosylation: The other glycan player of ER quality control

Published
1 May 2015
Seminars in Cell & Developmental Biology

Xu C Ng DT.

Nowhere else does the cell employ posttranslational protein modifications as extensively as in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). In fact, such modifications can comprise the bulk of the mass of a mature protein in some cases. The most common modification is glycosylation, with N-linked glycans being the most commonly studied and best understood. However, the covalent modification of serine and threonine side chains with mannose or O-mannosylation has been gaining interest. Part of the attention comes from the realization that O-mannosylation is a conserved process found in most eukaryotes and defects in O-mannosylation can give rise to human disease. Long known to be important structural modification of some endomembrane system proteins, recent findings reveal that it is a common modification of unfolded proteins. For irreversibly misfolded proteins, O-mannosylation can aid in their disposal through ER or lysosomal pathways. The protein O-mannosylation pathway can also play an instrumental role in monitoring the folding of newly synthesized proteins. Proteins that fail to fold efficiently are O-mannosylated to remove them from harmful futile protein folding cycles and prepare them for disposal. Thus, O-mannosylation joins N-linked glycosylation as a major mechanism involved in the folding and quality control of newly synthesized proteins in the ER.

Share